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Book Banning Efforts Bring on Title Fights

by

Stevenson Swanson

NEW YORK - The story seemed like a surefire hit for children. A pair of penguins take care of an egg that isn't theirs and then raise the baby penguin, after it hatches, as their own.How heartwarming. And who doesn't love penguins?

Plenty of parents, it turns out, when both penguin parents are male.

That plot twist earned "And Tango Makes Three" the distinction of being the most challenged book of 2006, according to the Chicago-based American Library Association, which compiles an annual list of titles that have been targeted by efforts to remove them from public and school libraries.

"Tango," by Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell, and other controversial titles from the 2006 list, such as two by Nobel laureate Toni Morrison and Cecily von Ziegesar's popular "Gossip Girl" series, will be the center of attention in the coming week at readings and other literary events nationwide as part of Banned Books Week, organized by the library association and other groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union.

In Chicago, the week kicked off Saturday with readings from books on the most-challenged list in Pioneer Court on Michigan Avenue.

Last year the number of challenges -- ranging from written complaints to full-blown hearings -- jumped to 546, more than 30 percent higher than in 2005. Such annual fluctuations are not unusual, said Judith Krug, head of the library association's office for intellectual freedom.

Despite the higher number of challenges, the vast majority of efforts to ban specific books came up short: only 29 titles were removed from library shelves last year. Among the titles that disappeared from some libraries were "Siddhartha" by Hermann Hesse, "The Bluest Eye" by Morrison and "Forever" by Judy Blume.

But even one removal is one too many for Krug.

"You're taking choice away," she said. "If it's removed, no one in that library or school has the opportunity to read that book."

Supporters of bans

Organizers of efforts to have books removed from public libraries or reading lists in schools say that their efforts are aimed at keeping graphic material, such as obscene language, out of the hands of children.

The library association has been "very successful in spreading their message that anything goes," said Dan Kleinman, who runs the Web site SafeLibraries .org, which calls for greater parental say in the books used in schools and available to children at libraries. Banned Books Week is "propaganda to convince parents to allow school boards and libraries to continue making inappropriate material available," he said.

Kleinman cited the decision by the school board in the southwest Chicago suburb of Oak Lawn to keep a book on a summer reading list for 8th graders despite its use of profanity and description of adolescent sexual desires. The board issued an apology for not notifying parents of the contents of the novel, "Fat Kid Rules the World."

Challenges involving books aimed at children or young adults make up "at least 75" of every 100 efforts to have a title removed, Krug said.

"Absolutely, parents should have the right to decide whether their children should have access to a book, but that right ends where my nose begins," said Krug, meaning that others might think that same book was appropriate for their children.

Objections to books come from all points on the political spectrum, she said. If the issue is homosexuality, the challenge is likely to come from religious conservatives, but if the issue is racism, the complaint is more likely to come from the left, "because they're concerned about eliminating 'isms,'" Krug said.

In past years, Mark Twain's use of an offensive term for blacks landed "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" on the most-challenged list. Twain is missing from the newest list.

Offending themes

So is Harry Potter. The Potter series, which concluded this year with the seventh book, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows," tops the list of most challenged titles from 2000 to 2006, but no new Potter book was published in 2006. Objections have been raised to various titles in the series because of their frequent violence and because some opponents maintain that author J.K. Rowling's stories about her young wizard hero promote Satanism.

One of the most common themes running through the titles of this year's top 10 challenged books is homosexuality, cited as grounds for objection in four books, starting with "And Tango Makes Three."

Simon and Schuster, the book's publisher, described "Tango" as intended for 4- to 8-year-olds, but parents in many communities, included Shiloh in Downstate Illinois, have complained the age range is too young for a story about a same-sex couple, whether two-legged or two-winged.

"The huge majority of parents would avoid this book if they knew it was brainwashing their children to support and experiment with homosexual behavior," said Randy Thomasson, president of the California-based Campaign for Children and Families.

The library association refused to disclose how many challenges have been mounted against "Tango," citing the group's confidentiality policy. But despite the challenges, the book was not removed from any library last year.

Parnell, a playwright and TV writer, and Richardson, a psychiatrist, got the idea for their book after reading a newspaper story about the zoo penguins.

"We felt that there was an opportunity in this story to talk about different kinds of families," said Parnell.

To Krug, the way to avoid conflicts is for a library's board to set clear standards for what it will acquire; but including books that deal with all manner of subjects is one of the most important functions of a library.

"Libraries are one place in the community where everyone is represented on the shelves," she said.

Content puts hot sellers on hit list

A look at some of the books that the American Library Association says faced the most challenges in 2006:

"And Tango Makes Three," by Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson. A Central Park Zoo zookeeper watches as two male penguins care for a rock as if it were an egg. He gives them a fertilized penguin egg, and the chick that hatches is named Tango. Opponents say the story promotes homosexuality and is inappropriate for 4- to 8-year-olds, the book's intended audience.

"Beloved," by Toni Morrison. This 1987 novel won the Pulitzer Prize. But it has been frequently challenged on the grounds that its story of a Civil War-era slave contains too much profanity, graphic sexual references and violence to be suitable even for high school students.

"The Chocolate War," by Robert Cormier. This story of a boy's refusal to sell chocolate bars for a school fundraiser has appeared frequently on the most-challenged list since it was published in 1974 because it includes obscenity, violence and strong sexual content. Two weeks ago, parents of students at a school on Chicago's Southwest Side protested its inclusion on required reading lists for 7th graders, but the principal refused to remove it.

The "Gossip Girl" series by Cecily von Ziegesar. Described as "Sex and the City" for teenage girls, these racy novels depict rich New York City girls who engage in casual sex, take drugs and get drunk. A 12th Gossip Girl book is due out in October.

The "Scary Stories" series by Alvin Schwartz. These books were challenged for being unsuitable for the target 9-and-older age group because of references to the occult and Satanism and for violent and insensitive content. The 25-year-old series, a regular on the challenged list, includes a story about a butcher who kills his wife, grinds her up and sells her as "special sausage."

*For more information about books challenged in 2006, go to the American Library Association Web site, http://www.ala.org .

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This week marks what would have been the 80th birthday of Jonathan Daniels, Episcopalian seminarian, civil rights activist, witness and martyr after he took the shotgun blast from an Alabama racist meant for black teenager Ruby Sales. An "ordinary man who saw great evil and responded with love," Daniels was 26. Today, Sales upholds his memory and mission as theologian and advocate. "I didn’t carry his death as a burden of guilt or as a weight," she says. "I carried it as a commitment."

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